Smith said Tolliver and Ewing playing U.S. college hockey adds to the Maritimes' rich hockey history. The region was home of the Colored Hockey League, an all-Black league that operated from 1895 to the 1930s with catchy names like the Jubilees, Stanleys, Eurekas, Sea-Sides and Moss Backs.
Tolliver said he has paid homage to that history by playing in Black History Month games that honored the Colored Hockey League over the years.
He said he set his sights on NCAA hockey as a teenager, drawn by the images and description of U.S. college life he saw on social media. He and Ewing also said they were lured by the academics; Tolliver is majoring in biochemistry and Ewing is studying business.
Tolliver said the transition to U.S. college hockey wasn't easy on or off the ice.
"In the beginning it was an adjustment, not necessarily to the physical aspect of playing against older men, but to the thinking speed of the game," he said. "Something I didn't expect in college hockey was the balancing of academics and athletics -- it's time-consuming. Time management, I believe I have gotten to the point where I've improved on that. So college hockey is everything I expected, and more."
Ewing agreed.
"It makes it even much better knowing that I can do this, playing hockey on top of a full course load, playing throughout the U.S.," he said. "It's really kind of nice I can be a positive influence on some young kids back home in Halifax."
Photos: Lebanon Valley College, Northland College